| ▲ | colinstrickland an hour ago | |
The platform always suffered from two big architectural missteps. 1 - the native browser being an old firefox/gecko fork embedded into their own UI framework, giving a poor performance and dated compatibility quirks 2 - the android emulating runtime meant that you get again, dated , poorly performing android apps, that you're driven towards because the browser engine was so poor. these two mean you basically end up with a sub-standard android handset/UI, and a tiny market for native app development (because everyone made do with android), its a real chicken/egg. In fairness I've not used it since the sony XPeria days, but it was my daily phone for 3-4 years since the Jolla 1. It was cool being able to emacs and irc natively on the phone, but that was limited in use cases tbh. | ||
| ▲ | 0rzech an hour ago | parent [-] | |
Same experience here, though from Sailfish OS run on their first Jolla phone. Also permission model on Sailfish was much worse than on Android. I didn't use Android apps on Sailfish, though. I really liked Silica UI, but available apps had much less functionality than their counterparts on Android and iOS. I think that open sourcing Sailfish and Silica would end up better for them. Nevertheless, I kinda liked the phone, but ultimately went back to Android. | ||